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Theme: The final play in the atmosphere of the NBA Finals, a superstar's step-back three-pointer for the game-winning shot. Duration: 15 seconds. Frame: 9:16. Vertical screen. Style: Ultra-realistic sports live broadcast + cinematic bullet time replay of key moments. Core principle: Like a live broadcast, not a game, not a commercial studio shoot. 15-second storyboard: 0.0s - 2.5s Close-up sideline shot, the protagonist dribbles the ball at a 45-degree angle on the right side. The arena is packed, with a real score bar and countdown at the top. The camera shakes slightly, like a handheld stabilizer used with a telephoto lens for broadcasting. The rubbing of shoes and the suppressed cheers of the crowd can be heard. 2.5s - 5.0s The defender closes in, the protagonist dribbles and changes direction repeatedly, probing with his shoulder, the physical contact is obvious. The camera zooms in on the dribbling area above the chest and waist, sweat, breathing, and jersey movements are clearly visible. The basket remains visible in the upper part of the frame. 5.0s - 7.0s The protagonist suddenly stops and steps back, creating half a step of space. The timer has only 2 to 3 seconds left. The commentator's volume rises, and the audience begins to stand. This is a build-up of emotion, no slow motion. 7.0s - 8.5s: Jump and release, entering bullet time. The camera circles in a semi-circle from the protagonist's side and front, moving at an extremely slow speed. Focused close-ups: fingers flicking the ball, beads of sweat hanging in the air, jersey fibers, shoe soles leaving the ground, audience flashes, the backboard and lights creating a strong sense of spatial depth. 8.5s - 10.5s: Instantly returning to normal speed, the basketball arcs high towards the basket. The camera zooms in slightly, the net, rim, and scoreboard all in focus. The sound effects tighten, briefly lowering the ambient noise to make the basket more impactful. 10.5s - 12.0s: Swish through the net, the \"swish\" of the net is very clear, the buzzer sounds almost simultaneously. The score changes, the commentator explodes, the audience erupts. 12.0s - 15.0s: The protagonist lands, turns around, and roars or spreads his arms in celebration; teammates rush over, the audience erupts in cheers, and cell phone flashes fill the screen. The camera then switches back to a live broadcast style, retaining a slight sense of compression and the chaotic atmosphere of the scene, like capturing the actual moment after the match.
How to work from this case
- Start with the original prompt and identify which subject, camera, and mood phrases drive the output.
- When iterating, change one variable first: lighting, motion, or emotion.
- If references are involved, adjust framing and movement separately for more stable generations.
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